Family members
pitch in to run creative recycling business
By
Will Collette
Phyllis
Hutnak, owner of Carolina-based Indie Cycle LLC,
credits her son Nate Hutnak for the idea. “He
was living in Providence and saw so many old computers, TVs, air conditioners
and other electronic goods left at the curb. Before long, those TVs were broken
up for the copper and the broken glass and debris was just left there.”
She
explained that electronic waste isn’t eligible for regular curbside pick-up and
should not be hidden in with the rest of the trash. “It’s hazardous waste. You don’t want to put that stuff in a landfill.”
Not to mention it’s illegal. “We are always getting TVs with big orange
stickers on them saying that they can’t be thrown out with the trash.”
She
and her family felt the existing options weren’t adequate to deal with the growing problem. The occasional special pick-up days were fine, but not enough. So
the idea for Indie Cycle LLC, a business that collects electronic waste either at
community events, such as farmers’ markets, or for large items like TVs, by
pick-up, was born.
They
also do commercial pick-ups most common when an office is upgrading
its computer systems. A “certificate of destruction” can be provided to those businesses that are required to account for old hard drives and equipment.
So
where does all of this stuff go? I mentioned to Phyllis that I recalled that
years back, electronic waste “recycling” had a bad reputation where the
material was simply dumped in Third World countries and picked over by the very
poor, including children. So I wanted to know what happens once she collects
electronic waste from clients or sites.
“We don’t store
any of the waste,” she
said. “We go to where the waste is, load
it on one of our two trucks and then take the waste to ORS (Office Recycling Solutions)
in East Greenwich.” ORS is “R-2 certified” meaning they have been
recognized by EPA as meeting the standards
for “Responsible Recycling.” Phyllis said she would only use R-2 vendors, as does ORS. The goal of EPA's R-2 program is zero landfill use.
"There is a lot
of valuable material in those electronics,” she said. In addition to copper,
some electronics contain gold, silver, palladium, rare earth minerals and other
material that should not be trashed. The steel and aluminum cases are also
recyclable. “We get paid by the pound for collecting the electronic goods and offer free drop off events in return."
Phyllis and Rep. Donna Walsh discussed ways new state legislation might get more e-waste recycled and out of landfills |
Recently, Charlestown
recycling efforts suffered a set-back when the town ended free drop-off
of recyclable electronic goods at the transfer station, cutting off one convenient way for residents to
responsibly get rid of old or unwanted TVs, printers and so on.
“Convenience is
the key,”
said Phyllis. “We go to the farmers’
markets because we know that many of the people who go care about the
environment and it's convenient for them to drop-off their old electronics for recycling. We take anything with a wire."
But
elsewhere, especially in the cities, if there are no convenient ways to recycle
electronics, it will either be thrown in the trash or left in the street.
Neither is a good idea.
Phyllis
feels there must be reliable, convenient ways for people to recycle their
electronics. “The cities could set a
particular day of the month for curbside pick-up. If the city can’t do the
pick-ups, contractors like us can do it.”
She
said that even though the state pulled back the electronics recycling program
(the reason why Charlestown no longer does it), most transfer stations still
have the PODs that were left there by a previous contractor and a new electronics contractor now collects the materials.
E-waste
is a huge and growing problem. The Electronics
Take-back Coalition estimates the US generates 3.4 million tons, but only recycles
around 1 million tons or less than 30%.
Every
time a new I-Phone comes out, there are lots of slightly older I-Phones in need
of recycling. Between 2012 and 2014, Americans bought almost 400 million new
smart phones, rendering a similar number obsolete. There’s about 50 pounds of
recoverable gold in every one million phones.
Phyllis’s
business is one of a new wave of small Rhode Island businesses looking at
electronics recycling as a good business opportunity that is also good for the
environment. These companies were recently featured here.
She explained, “My husband Anthony
and I are doing this part-time on the weekends, mostly through collections at community events, plus we provide weekday pick-ups on Wednesday through Friday. When the business presented with so many opportunities for free drop off events, we invested in a second truck.”
But
the need is out there and I’d love to see this Charlestown business succeed by being the answer to an ever-growing e-waste problem in local RI communities. And Charlestown could help by working with them to restore
a convenient way for Charlestown to recycle their e-waste. It might be one way
to reverse Charlestown’s
terrible recycling record.